69传媒

Mathematics

Which Nation鈥檚 69传媒 Are Defying the Math Anxiety Trend?

By Sarah Schwartz 鈥 November 25, 2024 5 min read
Collage illustration of a dramatic sky with black clouds and a tornado made of numbers with a small female looking up at the ominous tornado overhead.
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Teenagers across the world are becoming more afraid of math.

Math anxiety鈥攆eeling tense, worried, or helpless while doing or thinking about doing math鈥攈as risen over the past decade, according to self-reports from 15-year-olds on the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development鈥檚 Program for International Student Assessment, or PISA.

The change could be 鈥渄etrimental to lifelong learning,鈥 according to a report released this month analyzing the latest set of results from the 2022 test administration.

鈥69传媒 who develop negative feelings towards mathematics at schools may be less likely to opt for further education that includes mathematics,鈥 the report reads. 鈥淭hey may avoid reskilling opportunities that involve mathematics as well.鈥

It鈥檚 hard to know what鈥檚 causing the trend, said Moriah Sokolowski, an assistant professor of psychology at Toronto Metropolitan University in Canada who studies mathematical thinking. It could be related to students鈥 perception that their math performance has high-stakes consequences, she said, noting that the past decade has seen growth in well-paying jobs with substantial math and science demands.

The pandemic likely also plays a role, said Lindsey Engle Richland, a professor of education at the University of California, Irvine.

鈥淥ne thing we just can鈥檛 get away from is that there was a major decrease in math achievement after the COVID pandemic, and we鈥檙e still recovering,鈥 Richland said. 鈥淲e know that math anxiety and math achievement go hand in hand.鈥

Still, there are a few countries that deviate from this pattern鈥攎ost significantly, Korea, where the percentage of students who reported experiencing math anxiety decreased from 44 percent in 2012 to 32 percent in 2022.

The result is notable in a country known for its culture of intense academic competition, where many students attend 鈥渃ram schools鈥 following the regular school day.

Historically, Korean students have scored high on international benchmarks of math ability, including PISA, but low on measures of student confidence in the subject, said Jaekyung Lee, a professor of education at the University at Buffalo, SUNY, who has .

Two decades of changes designed to lower the pressure鈥攃oupled with the effects of the pandemic鈥攎ay have started to shift the tide, he said.

How math instruction affects math anxiety鈥攁nd vice versa

Math anxiety has a cyclical relationship with math ability, said Richland.

Kids who are stressed about taking a math test, for example, have a harder time focusing on their calculations. That makes it more likely that they鈥檒l get the problems wrong.

But the relationship also goes the other way, Richland said. Helping students get better at math can actually decrease their anxiety.

Having a strong grasp of the basics鈥攍ike multiplication tables, for example鈥攃an free up cognitive resources, making it easier to handle complex work, said Sokolowski.

In the United States, national math education organizations and influential states have de-emphasized memorization and repeated practice, moving toward more of a focus on open-ended problem-solving. (Math education researchers maintain that both are necessary鈥攆luency with basic facts and procedures helps deepen conceptual understanding, and vice versa.)

This shift, in part, was meant to lessen students鈥 negative feelings toward math, engaging them in more critical thinking and application-oriented problems. But it鈥檚 possible that it could have had the opposite effect, said Sokolowski.

鈥淚t could be this feedback cycle where kids aren鈥檛 mastering the basics, and aren鈥檛 able to get to these higher problems, which is leading to math anxiety,鈥 she said.

In Korea, by contrast, students spend a lot of time ensuring they have a solid grasp on math concepts. Most attend tutoring at dedicated after-school institutes, called hagwonslong hours of study that families hope will give their children a leg up in competitive college admissions.

鈥淭he purpose of private tutoring is not to catch up. It鈥檚 to get ahead of the others,鈥 said Lee.

But this high-pressure environment also breeds anxiety, Lee said. Over the past 20 years, Korean education reform has aimed to mitigate these issues, with government officials emphasizing students鈥 well-being and promoting student-centered pedagogy. These changes may have started to take hold, he said.

It could also be that Korean students fared better during the pandemic than teens in other countries.

鈥淜orea had a relatively shorter period of school closure,鈥 Lee said. 鈥淎t the same time, they were also better able to provide support for students [during remote learning], because the country has very strong digital infrastructure.鈥

A decline in student mental health could play a role

It鈥檚 also possible that global changes in reports of math anxiety don鈥檛 actually have much to do with math achievement.

Teenagers may be more willing to say that math makes them anxious now than teenagers in previous years, even if the two groups felt similarly, said Sokolowski. 鈥淢ental health is less of the taboo thing that it once was,鈥 she said.

Children鈥檚 mental health is also declining in general. In 2021, 42 percent of high school students said that at some point in the previous year, they felt so sad or hopeless that they stopped engaging in their usual activities鈥攃ompared to 26 percent in 2009.

鈥淚t may be that there鈥檚 this sort of globalized anxiety piece that鈥檚 playing into math performance as well,鈥 Richland said.

Whether math anxiety stems from fear of the subject itself, or is tied to more general stress about school and the future, there are ways for teachers to address it in the moment.

鈥淚f anxiety is disrupting attention and executive function, having teachers use practices that reduce the load in learning can be helpful,鈥 Richland said. One tool in mathematics, she added, could be worked examples: step-by-step explanations of how to solve a problem to which students can refer back.

Data from PISA show that certain teacher moves, such as encouraging students to find new ways to solve problems and prompting them to connect new and prior knowledge, are correlated with student reports of lower math anxiety.

Fostering the use of these strategies could help students cope with these feelings, the report suggests.

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